COMPLETE FILMOGRAPHY WITH SYNOPSIS

Writer (feature film)

1.

White Mama (1980)
Bette Davis was Emmy Award-nominated for her performance of a penniless widow who refuses to go on welfare and takes in a streetwise Black teenager as a foster child to earn money to survive. The script was written especially for her by first-time screenwriter Robert C.S. Downs.

Film Production - Main (feature film)

Summertree (1971)
as Script Supervisor
As he is dying in Vietnam, a young soldier remembers his girlfriend, and the fights he had with his parents over becoming a musician instead of going to college and his plan to evade the draft. He also recalls the "summertree" where he spent so many of his happiest times he was sent off to war.

4.

Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970)
as Script Supervisor
Junie Moon's face has been disfigured by ill-gotten burns, and depends on her friends and her wit to cope. She, Warren, and Arthur leave the hospital - they yearn for independence - and find a house to live in. Together they stumble into adventures involving the local fish vendor, nosy neighbors, surreptitious vacations, love, and frustration in finding jobs as they face subtle prejudices in their community, and their own particular medical problems.

5.

Uptight (1968)
as Script Supervisor
A desperate African-American man betrays his friend, a black militant leader, for some money to help feed his girlfriend's children, and then becomes the object of a manhunt by the militant group,

6.

The Secret Life of an American Wife (1968)
as Script Supervisor
An insecure housewife has an affair with a well-known cinema actor, in order to prove to her husband that she's still a desireable woman.

7.

Made in Paris (1966)
as Script Supervisor
A young fashion designer is transformed by her first trip to Paris.

8.

Spinout (1966)
as Script Supervisor
A singing race-car driver has to choose among three amorous females.

9.

Girl Happy (1965)
as Script Supervisor
A rock singer is hired to chaperone a gangster's daughter in Fort Lauderdale.

10.

Advance to the Rear (1964)
as Script Supervisor
Civil War rejects are sent to the West, supposedly out of harm's way.